Audio-visual effects system for augmentation of captured performance based on content thereof

ABSTRACT

Visual effects schedules are applied to audiovisual performances with differing visual effects applied in correspondence with differing elements of musical structure. Segmentation techniques applied to one or more audio tracks (e.g., vocal or backing tracks) are used to compute some of the components of the musical structure. In some cases, applied visual effects schedules are mood-denominated and may be selected by a performer as a component of his or her visual expression or determined from an audiovisual performance using machine learning techniques.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application claims benefit, under 35 U.S.C. 119(e), of U.S.Provisional Application No. 62/548,122, filed Aug. 21, 2017. The presentapplication is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No.15/910,646, filed Mar. 2, 2018, entitled “AUTOMATED GENERATION OFCOORDINATED AUDIOVISUAL WORK BASED ON CONTENT CAPTURED FROMGEOGRAPHICALLY DISTRIBUTED PERFORMERS,” and naming Sung, Kim, Moldover,Shimmin, Yang and Cook as inventors, which in turn is a continuation ofU.S. application Ser. No. 15/173,041, filed Jun. 3, 2016, now U.S. Pat.No. 9,911,403, which further in turn claims priority of U.S. ProvisionalApplication No. 62/170,255, filed Jun. 3, 2015. The present applicationis also a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/944,537,filed Apr. 3, 2018, entitled “AUDIOVISUAL COLLABORATION METHOD WITHLATENCY MANAGEMENT FOR WIDE-AREA BROADCAST,” and naming Holmberg, Hersh,Yang, Cook, and Smith as inventors, which in turn claims priority ofU.S. Provisional Application No. 62/480,610, filed Apr. 3, 2017.

The present application is related to U.S. Pat. No. 9,866,731, entitled“COORDINATING AND MIXING AUDIOVISUAL CONTENT CAPTURED FROMGEOGRAPHICALLY DISTRIBUTED PERFORMERS.” Each of the foregoingapplications and patents is incorporated by reference herein.

BACKGROUND Field of the Invention

The invention relates generally to capture and/or processing of vocalaudio performances and, in particular, to techniques suitable for use inapplying selected visual effects to performance synchronized video in amanner consistent with musical structure of, or underlying, theperformance.

Description of the Related Art

The installed base of mobile phones and other portable computing devicesgrows in sheer number and computational power each day. Hyper-ubiquitousand deeply entrenched in the lifestyles of people around the world, theytranscend nearly every cultural and economic barrier. Computationally,the mobile phones of today offer speed and storage capabilitiescomparable to desktop computers from less than ten years ago, renderingthem surprisingly suitable for real-time sound synthesis and othermusical applications. Partly as a result, some modern mobile phones,such as iPhone® handheld digital devices, available from Apple Inc.,support audio and video playback quite capably.

Like traditional acoustic instruments, mobile phones can be intimatesound producing and capture devices. However, by comparison to mosttraditional instruments, they are somewhat limited in acoustic bandwidthand power. Nonetheless, despite these disadvantages, mobile phones dohave the advantages of ubiquity, strength in numbers, and ultramobility,making it feasible to (at least in theory) bring together artists forperformance almost anywhere, anytime. The field of mobile music has beenexplored in several developing bodies of research. Indeed, recentexperience with applications such as the Smule Ocarina™, Smule MagicPiano, and Smule Sing! Karaoke™ (all available from Smule, Inc.) hasshown that advanced digital acoustic techniques may be delivered in waysthat provide a compelling user experience.

As digital acoustic researchers seek to transition their innovations tocommercial applications deployable to modern handheld devices such asthe iPhone® handheld and other platforms operable within the real-worldconstraints imposed by processor, memory and other limited computationalresources thereof and/or within communications bandwidth andtransmission latency constraints typical of wireless networks,significant practical challenges present. Improved techniques andfunctional capabilities are desired, particularly relative to video.

SUMMARY AND DESCRIPTION

It has been discovered that, despite many practical limitations imposedby mobile device platforms and application execution environments,audiovisual performances, including vocal music, may be captured ormanipulated and (in some cases) coordinated with those of other users inways that create compelling user experiences. In some cases, the vocalperformances of individual users are captured (together with performancesynchronized video) on mobile devices or using set-top box typeequipment in the context of a karaoke-style presentation of lyrics incorrespondence with audible renderings of a backing track. In somecases, pitch cues may be presented to vocalists in connection with thekaraoke-style presentation of lyrics and, optionally, continuousautomatic pitch correction (or pitch shifting into harmony) may beprovided.

Vocal audio of a user together with performance synchronized video is,in some cases or embodiments, captured and coordinated with audiovisualcontributions of other users to form composite duet-style or gleeclub-style or window-paned music video-style audiovisual performances.In some cases, the vocal performances of individual users are captured(together with performance synchronized video) on mobile devices,television-type display and/or set-top box equipment in the context ofkaraoke-style presentations of lyrics in correspondence with audiblerenderings of a backing track. Contributions of multiple vocalists canbe coordinated and mixed in a manner that selects for presentation, atany given time along a given performance timeline, performancesynchronized video of one or more of the contributors. Selectionsprovide a sequence of visual layouts in correspondence with other codedaspects of a performance score such as pitch tracks, backing audio,lyrics, sections and/or vocal parts.

Visual effects schedules are applied to audiovisual performances withdiffering visual effects applied in correspondence with differingelements of musical structure. In some cases, segmentation techniquesapplied to one or more audio tracks (e.g., vocal or backing tracks) areused to determine elements of the musical structure. In some cases,applied visual effects schedules are mood-denominated and may beselected by a performer as a component of his or her visual expressionor may be determined from an audiovisual performance using machinelearning techniques.

In some embodiments of the present invention, a method includesaccessing a machine readable encoding of a first audiovisual performanceand applying a first visual effect schedule to at least a portion of thefirst audiovisual performance encoding. The first audiovisualperformance is captured as vocal audio with performance synchronizedvideo and has an associated musical structure encoding that includes atleast musical section boundaries coded for temporal alignment with thefirst audiovisual performance encoding. The applied visual effectschedule encodes differing visual effects for differing musicalstructure elements of the first audiovisual performance encoding andprovides visual effect transitions in temporal alignment with at leastsome of the coded musical section boundaries.

In some embodiments, the method further includes segmenting at least anaudio track of the first audiovisual performance encoding to provide theassociated musical structure encoding. In some cases or embodiments, theassociated musical structure encoding includes group part or musicalsection metadata. In some cases or embodiments, the differing visualeffects differ in either degree or type or both degree and type.

In some embodiments, the method further includes selecting the firstvisual effect schedule from amongst a plurality of mood-denominatedvisual effect schedules. In some cases or embodiments, the selecting isbased on a computationally-determined mood for at least the capturedvocal audio. In some cases or embodiments, the selecting is based on auser interface selection by the vocal audio performer prior to, orcoincident with, capture of the vocal audio. In some embodiments, themethod further includes (i) selecting (after the audiovisual renderingof the first audiovisual performance) a second visual effect schedulefrom amongst the plurality of mood-denominated visual effect schedules,the second visual effect schedule differing from the first visual effectschedule, and (ii) applying the second visual effect schedule to atleast a portion of the first audiovisual performance encoding. In someembodiments, the method further includes selecting a second visualeffect schedule from amongst the plurality of mood-denominated visualeffect schedules, the second visual effect schedule differing from thefirst visual effect schedule; and applying the second visual effectschedule to at least a portion of the first audiovisual performanceencoding.

In some embodiments, the method further includes streaming, to anaudience at one or more remote client devices, the first audiovisualperformance. In some cases or embodiments, the streamed firstaudiovisual performance is mixed with an encoding of a backing trackagainst which the vocal audio was captured. In some cases orembodiments, the streamed first audiovisual performance is streamed withthe first visual effect schedule applied. In some embodiments, themethod further includes supplying an identification of the appliedvisual effect schedule for video effect rendering at one or more of theremote client devices.

In some embodiments, the method further includes transferring (to, from,or via a content server or service platform) the first audiovisualperformance together with at least an identifier for the one or moreapplied visual effect schedules. In some cases or embodiments, theselecting is based on a user interface selection during, or prior to,audiovisual rendering of the first audiovisual performance.

In some cases or embodiments, for a particular mood-denominated visualeffect schedule, mood values are parameterized as a two-dimensionalquantity, wherein a first dimension of the mood parameterization codesan emotion and wherein second dimension of the mood parameterizationcodes an intensity. In some embodiments, the method further includesdetermining an intensity dimension of the mood parameterization based onone or more of: (i) a time-varying audio signal strength or vocal energydensity measure computationally determined from the vocal audio and (ii)beats, tempo, signal strength or energy density of a backing audiotrack.

In some embodiments, the method further includes segmenting the firstaudiovisual performance encoding to identify the differing musicalstructure elements. In some cases or embodiments, the segmenting isbased at least in part on a computational determination of vocalintensity with at least some segmentation boundaries constrained totemporally align with beats or tempo computationally extracted from acorresponding audio backing track. In some cases or embodiments, thesegmenting is based at least in part on a similarity analysiscomputationally performed on a temporally-aligned lyrics track toclassify particular portions of first audiovisual performance encodingas verse or chorus.

In some cases or embodiments, the differing visual effects encoded bythe applied visual effect schedule include for a given element thereof,one or more of: (i) a particle-based effect or lens flare, (ii)transitions between distinct source videos, (iii) animations or motionof a frame within a source video, (iv) vector graphics or images ofpatterns or textures; and (v) color, saturation or contrast. In somecases or embodiments, the associated musical structure encodes musicalsections of differing types and the applied visual effect scheduledefines differing visual effects for different ones of the encodedmusical sections. In some cases or embodiments, the associated musicalstructure encodes events or transitions and the applied visual effectschedule defines differing visual effects for different ones of theencoded events or transitions.

In some cases or embodiments, the machine readable encoding furtherencodes at least part of a second audiovisual performance captured assecond vocal audio with performance synchronized video, the first andsecond audiovisual performances constituting a group performance. Insome cases or embodiments, the associated musical structure encodesgroup parts, and the applied visual effect schedule is temporallyselective for particular performance synchronized video incorrespondence with the encoded musical structure.

In some cases or embodiments, the first and second audiovisualperformances present as a duet. In some cases or embodiments, theapplied visual effect schedule codes, for at least some musicalstructure elements, color matching of performance synchronized video forrespective performers in the group performance. In some cases orembodiments, the applied visual effect schedule codes, for at least somemusical structure elements, a visual blur or blend at an interfacebetween performance synchronized video for respective performers in thegroup performance. In some cases or embodiments, the first and secondaudiovisual performances are captured against a common backing track.

In some embodiments, the method further includes capturing the firstaudiovisual performance at a network-connected vocal capture devicecommunicatively coupled to a content server or service platform fromwhich the musical structure encoding is supplied. In some cases orembodiments, the audiovisual performance capture is performed at thenetwork-connected vocal capture device in accordance with aKaraoke-style operational mechanic in which lyrics are visuallypresented in correspondence with audible rendering of a backing track.

In some embodiments, the method is performed, at least in part, on acontent server or service platform to which geographically-distributed,network-connected, vocal capture devices are communicatively coupled. Insome embodiments, the method is performed, at least in part, on anetwork-connected, vocal capture device communicatively coupled to acontent server or service platform. In some embodiments, the method isembodied, at least in part, as a computer program product encoding ofinstructions executable on a content server or service platform to whicha plurality of geographically-distributed, network-connected, vocalcapture devices are communicatively coupled.

In some embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s), asystem includes a geographically distributed set of network-connecteddevices configured to capture audiovisual performances including vocalaudio with performance synchronized video and a service platform. Theservice platform is configured to (i) receive encodings of the capturedaudiovisual performances and, in correspondence with associated musicalstructure encodings that include at least musical section boundariescoded for temporal alignment with the audiovisual performance encodings,to (ii) apply particular visual effect schedules to at least a portionof the audiovisual performance encodings. The applied visual effectschedules encode differing visual effects for differing musicalstructure elements of the audiovisual performance encodings and providevisual effect transitions in temporal alignment with at least some ofthe coded musical section boundaries.

In some cases or embodiments, the service platform is configured to(responsive to user or performer selections) change the applied visualeffect schedules and supply resulting captured audiovisual performancesto respective ones of the geographically distributed network-connecteddevices for audiovisual rendering thereon. In some cases or embodiments,the applied visual effect schedules are selected from amongst aplurality of mood-denominated visual effect schedules.

In some embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s), asystem includes at least a guest and host pairing of network-connecteddevices configured to capture at least vocal audio. The host device isconfigured to (i) receive from the guest device an encoding of arespective encoding of at least vocal audio and, in correspondence withan associated musical structure encoding that includes at least musicalsection boundaries coded for temporal alignment with an audiovisualperformance encoding, to (ii) apply a selected visual effect schedulesto the audiovisual performance encoding. The applied visual effectschedules encode differing visual effects for differing musicalstructure elements of the audiovisual performance encoding and providevisual effect transitions in temporal alignment with at least some ofthe coded musical section boundaries.

In some cases or embodiments, the host and guest devices are coupled aslocal and remote peers via communication network with non-negligiblepeer-to-peer latency for transmissions of audiovisual content, the hostdevice communicatively coupled as the local peer to receive a mediaencoding of a mixed audio performance constituting vocal audio capturedat the guest device, and the guest device is communicatively coupled asthe remote peer to supply the media encoding captured from a first oneof the performers and mixed with a backing audio track. In some cases orembodiments, the associated musical structure encoding iscomputationally determined at the host device based on segmenting atleast an audio track received from the guest device. In some cases orembodiments, the host device is configured to render the audiovisualperformance coding as a mixed audiovisual performance, including vocalaudio and performance synchronized video from the first and a second oneof the performers, and transmit the audiovisual performance coding as anapparently live broadcast with the selected visual effect scheduleapplied.

These and other embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s)will be understood with reference to the description and appended claimswhich follow.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present invention is illustrated by way of example and notlimitation with reference to the accompanying figures, in which likereferences generally indicate similar elements or features.

FIG. 1 depicts information flows amongst illustrative mobile phone-typeportable computing devices, television-type displays, set-top box-typemedia application platforms, and an exemplary content server inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s) in which avisual effects schedule is applied to an audiovisual performance.

FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C are successive snapshots of vocal performancesynchronized video along a coordinated audiovisual performance timelinewherein, in accordance with some embodiments of the present invention,video for one, the other or both of two contributing vocalist has vocaleffects applied based on a mood and based on a computationally-definedaudio feature such as vocal intensity computed over the captured vocals.

FIGS. 3A, 3B and 3C illustrates an exemplary implementation of asegmentation and video effects (VFX) engine in accordance with someembodiments of the present invention(s). FIG. 3A depicts informationflows involving an exemplary coding of musical structure, while FIG. 3Bdepicts an alternative view that focuses on an exemplary VFX renderingpipeline. Finally, FIG. 3C graphically depicts presents an exemplarymapping of vocal parts and segments to visual layouts, transitions,post-processed video effects and particle-based effects.

FIG. 4 depicts information flows amongst illustrative mobile phone-typeportable computing devices in a host and guest configuration inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s) in which avisual effects schedule is applied to a live-stream, duet-type groupaudiovisual performance.

FIG. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating information transfers thatcontribute to or involve a composited audiovisual performance segmentedto provide musical structure for video effects mapping in accordancewith some embodiments of the present invention(s).

FIG. 6 is a functional block diagram of hardware and software componentsexecutable at an illustrative mobile phone-type portable computingdevice to facilitate processing of a captured audiovisual performance inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s).

FIG. 7 illustrates process steps and results of processing, inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s), to applycolor correction and mood-denominated video effects to video forrespective performers of a group performance separately captured usingcameras of respective capture devices.

FIGS. 8A and 8B illustrate visuals for a group performance with andwithout use of a visual blur technique applied in accordance with someembodiments of the present invention(s).

FIG. 9 illustrates features of a mobile device that may serve as aplatform for execution of software implementations, includingaudiovisual capture, in accordance with some embodiments of the presentinvention(s).

FIG. 10 is a network diagram that illustrates cooperation of exemplarydevices in accordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s).

Skilled artisans will appreciate that elements or features in thefigures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have notnecessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions orprominence of some of the illustrated elements or features may beexaggerated relative to other elements or features in an effort to helpto improve understanding of embodiments of the present invention.

DESCRIPTION

Techniques have been developed to facilitate the capture, pitchcorrection, harmonization, encoding and/or rendering of audiovisualperformances on portable computing devices and living room-styleentertainment equipment. Vocal audio together with performancesynchronized video may be captured and coordinated with audiovisualcontributions of other users to form duet-style or glee club-style orwindow-paned music video-style audiovisual performances. In some cases,the vocal performances of individual users are captured (together withperformance synchronized video) on mobile devices, television-typedisplay and/or set-top box equipment in the context of karaoke-stylepresentations of lyrics in correspondence with audible renderings of abacking track. In some cases, pitch cues may be presented to vocalistsin connection with the karaoke-style presentation of lyrics and,optionally, continuous automatic pitch correction (or pitch shiftinginto harmony) may be provided.

Often, contributions of multiple vocalists are coordinated and mixed ina manner that selects for presentation and, at given times along a givenperformance timeline applies mood-denominated visual effects to,performance synchronized video of one or more of the contributors. Insome cases or embodiments, techniques of the present invention(s) may beapplied even to single performer audiovisual content. In general,selections are in accord with a segmentation of certain audio tracks todetermine musical structure of the audiovisual performance. Based on themusical structure, particle-based effects, transitions between videosources, animations or motion of frames, vector graphics or images ofpatterns/textures, color/saturation/contrast and/or other visual effectscoded in a video effects schedule are applied to respective portions ofthe audiovisual performance. In this way, visual effects are applied incorrespondence with coded aspects of a performance or features such asvocal tracks, backing audio, lyrics, sections and/or vocal parts. Theparticular visual effects applied vary throughout the course of a givenaudiovisual performance based on segmentation performed and/or based onvocal intensity computationally determined for one or more vocal tracks.

In general, for a given song, aspects of the song's musical structureare selective for the particular visual effects applied from amood-denominated visual effect schedule, and intensity measures(typically vocal intensity, but in some cases, power density ofnon-vocal audio) are used to modulate or otherwise control the magnitudeor prominence of the applied visual effects. For example, in some cases,situations or embodiments, song form, such as {verse, chorus, verse,chorus, bridge . . . }, is used to constrain the mapping. In some cases,such as in a duet, vocal part sequencing (e.g., you sing a line, I singa line, you sing two words, I sing three, we sing together . . . )provides structural information that is used to create a sequence ofvisual layouts. In some cases, situations or embodiments, buildingintensity of a song (e.g., as measured by acoustic power, tempo or someother measure) can be selective for the particular visual effectsapplied from a particular vocal effects schedule.

Optionally, and in some cases or embodiments, vocal audio can bepitch-corrected in real-time at the vocal capture device (e.g., at aportable computing device such as a mobile phone, personal digitalassistant, laptop computer, notebook computer, pad-type computer ornetbook) in accord with pitch correction settings. In some cases, pitchcorrection settings code a particular key or scale for the vocalperformance or for portions thereof. In some cases, pitch correctionsettings include a score-coded melody and/or harmony sequence suppliedwith, or for association with, the lyrics and backing tracks. Harmonynotes or chords may be coded as explicit targets or relative to thescore-coded melody or even actual pitches sounded by a vocalist, ifdesired. Machine usable musical instrument digital interface-style(MIDI-style) codings may be employed for lyrics, backing tracks, notetargets, vocal parts (e.g., vocal part 1, vocal part 2, . . . together),musical section information (e.g., intro/outro, verse, pre-chorus,chorus, bridge, transition and/or other section codings), etc. In somecases or embodiments, conventional MIDI-style codings may be extended toalso encode a score-aligned, progression of visual effects to beapplied.

Based on the compelling and transformative nature of pitch-correctedvocals, performance synchronized video and score-coded harmony mixes,user/vocalists may overcome an otherwise natural shyness or angstassociated with sharing their vocal performances. Instead, evengeographically distributed vocalists are encouraged to share withfriends and family or to collaborate and contribute vocal performancesas part of social music networks. In some implementations, theseinteractions are facilitated through social network- and/oreMail-mediated sharing of performances and invitations to join in agroup performance. Using uploaded vocals captured at clients such as theaforementioned portable computing devices, a content server (or service)can mediate such coordinated performances by manipulating and mixing theuploaded audiovisual content of multiple contributing vocalists.Depending on the goals and implementation of a particular system, inadditional to video content, uploads may include pitch-corrected vocalperformances (with or without harmonies), dry (i.e., uncorrected)vocals, and/or control tracks of user key and/or pitch correctionselections, etc.

Social music can be mediated in any of a variety of ways. For example,in some implementations, a first user's vocal performance, capturedagainst a backing track at a portable computing device and typicallypitch-corrected in accord with score-coded melody and/or harmony cues,is supplied, as a seed performance, to other potential vocal performers.Performance synchronized video is also captured and may be supplied withthe pitch-corrected, captured vocals. The supplied vocals are typicallymixed with backing instrumentals/vocals and form the backing track forcapture of a second (and potentially successive) user's vocals. Often,the successive vocal contributors are geographically separated and maybe unknown (at least a priori) to each other, yet the intimacy of thevocals together with the collaborative experience itself tends tominimize this separation. As successive vocal performances and video arecaptured (e.g., at respective portable computing devices) and accretedas part of the social music experience, the backing track against whichrespective vocals are captured may evolve to include previously capturedvocals of other contributors.

In some cases, vocals (and typically synchronized video) are captured aspart of a live or unscripted performance with vocal interactions (e.g.,a duet or dialog) between collaborating contributors. It is envisionedthat non-negligible network communication latencies will exist betweenat least some of the collaborating contributors, particularly wherethose contributors are geographically separated. As a result, atechnical challenge exists to manage latencies and the capturedaudiovisual content in such a way that a combined audio visualperformance nonetheless can be disseminated (e.g., broadcast) in amanner that presents to recipients, listeners and/or viewers as a liveinteractive collaboration.

The above-incorporated U.S. application Ser. No. 15/944,537 details avariety of suitable technical solutions to such challenges. For example,in one technique for accomplishing a facsimile of live interactiveperformance collaboration, actual and non-negligible networkcommunication latency is (in effect) masked in one direction between aguest and host performer and tolerated in the other direction. Forexample, a captured audiovisual performance of a guest performer on a“live show” internet broadcast of a host performer could include aguest+host duet sung in apparent real-time synchrony. In some cases, theguest could be a performer who has popularized a particular musicalperformance. In some cases, the guest could be an amateur vocalist giventhe opportunity to sing “live” (though remote) with the popular artistor group “in studio” as (or with) the show's host. Notwithstanding anon-negligible network communication latency from guest-to-host involvedin the conveyance of the guest's audiovisual contribution stream(perhaps 200-500 ms or more), the host performs in apparent synchronywith (though temporally lagged from, in an absolute sense) the guest andthe apparently synchronously performed vocals are captured and mixedwith the guest's contribution for broadcast or dissemination.

The result is an apparently live interactive performance (at least fromthe perspective of the host and the recipients, listeners and/or viewersof the disseminated or broadcast performance). Although thenon-negligible network communication latency from guest-to-host ismasked, it will be understood that latency exists and is tolerated inthe host-to-guest direction. However, host-to-guest latency, whilediscernible (and perhaps quite noticeable) to the guest, need not beapparent in the apparently live broadcast or other dissemination. It hasbeen discovered that lagged audible rendering of host vocals (or moregenerally, of the host's captured audiovisual performance) need notpsychoacoustically interfere with the guest's performance.

Performance synchronized video may be captured and included in acombined audiovisual performance that constitutes the apparently livebroadcast, wherein visuals may be based, at least in part, ontime-varying, computationally-defined audio features extracted from (orcomputed over) captured vocal audio. In some cases or embodiments, thesecomputationally-defined audio features are selective, over the course ofa coordinated audiovisual mix, for particular synchronized video of oneor more of the contributing vocalists (or prominence thereof).

In some cases, captivating visual animations and/or facilities forlistener comment and ranking, as well as duet, glee club or choral groupformation or accretion logic are provided in association with an audiblerendering of a vocal performance (e.g., that captured andpitch-corrected at another similarly configured mobile device) mixedwith backing instrumentals and/or vocals. Synthesized harmonies and/oradditional vocals (e.g., vocals captured from another vocalist at stillother locations and optionally pitch-shifted to harmonize with othervocals) may also be included in the mix. Geocoding of captured vocalperformances (or individual contributions to a combined performance)and/or listener feedback may facilitate animations or display artifactsin ways that are suggestive of a performance or endorsement emanatingfrom a particular geographic locale on a user manipulable globe. In thisway, implementations of the described functionality can transformotherwise mundane mobile devices into social instruments that foster asense of global connectivity, collaboration and community.

Karaoke-Style Vocal Performance Capture

Although embodiments of the present invention(s) are not limitedthereto, pitch-corrected, karaoke-style, vocal capture using mobilephone-type and/or television-type audiovisual equipment provides auseful descriptive context. Likewise, although embodiments of thepresent invention(s) are not limited to multi-performer content,coordinated multi-performer audiovisual content, including multi-vocalcontent captured or prepared asynchronously or that captured andlive-streamed with latency management techniques described herein,provides a useful descriptive context.

In some embodiments such as illustrated in FIG. 1, an iPhone® handheldavailable from Apple Inc. (or more generally, handheld 101) hostssoftware that executes in coordination with a content server 110 toprovide vocal capture and continuous real-time, score-coded pitchcorrection and harmonization of the captured vocals. Performancesynchronized video may be captured using a camera provided by, or inconnection with, a television or other audiovisual media device 101A orconnected set-top box equipment (101B) such as an Apple TV™ device.Performance synchronized video may also be captured using an on-boardcamera provided by handheld 101.

As is typical of karaoke-style applications (such as the Sing! Karaoke™app available from Smule, Inc.), a backing track of instrumentals and/orvocals can be audibly rendered for a user/vocalist to sing against. Insuch cases, lyrics may be displayed (102, 102A) in correspondence withthe audible rendering (104, 104A) so as to facilitate a karaoke-stylevocal performance by a user. In the illustrated configuration of FIG. 1,lyrics, timing information, pitch and harmony cues (105), backing tracks(e.g., instrumentals/vocals), performance coordinated video, schedulesof video effects (107), etc. may all be sourced from a network-connectedcontent server 110. In some cases or situations, backing audio and/orvideo may be rendered from a media store such as an iTunes™ library orother audiovisual content store resident or accessible from thehandheld, a set-top box, media streaming device, etc.

For simplicity, a wireless local area network 180 may be assumed toprovide communications between handheld 101, any audiovisual and/orset-top box equipment and a wide-area network gateway to hosted serviceplatforms such as content server 110. FIG. 10 depicts an exemplarynetwork configuration. However, based on the description herein, personsof skill in the art will recognize that any of a variety of datacommunications facilities, including 802.11 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth™ , 4G-LTEwireless, wired data networks, wired or wireless audiovisualinterconnects such as in accord with HDMI, AVI, Wi-Di standards orfacilities may employed, individually or in combination to facilitatecommunications and/or audiovisual rendering described herein.

Referring again to the example of FIG. 1, user vocals 103 are capturedat handheld 101, and optionally pitch-corrected continuously and inreal-time either at the handheld or using computational facilities ofaudiovisual display and/or set-top box equipment (101B) and audiblyrendered (see 104, 104A) mixed with the backing track to provide theuser with an improved tonal quality rendition of his/her own vocalperformance. Note that while captured vocals 103 and audible rendering104, 104A are illustrated using a convenient visual symbology that iscentric on microphone and speaker facilities of handheld 101 ortelevision/audiovisual media device 101A, persons of skill in the arthaving benefit of the present disclosure will appreciate that, in manycases, microphone and speaker functionality may be provided usingattached or wirelessly-connected ear buds, headphones, speakers,feedback isolated microphones, etc. Accordingly, unless specificallylimited, vocal capture and audible rendering should be understoodbroadly and without limitation to a particular audio transducerconfiguration.

Pitch correction, when provided, is typically based on score-coded notesets or cues (e.g., pitch and harmony cues 105), which providecontinuous pitch-correction algorithms with performance synchronizedsequences of target notes in a current key or scale. In addition toperformance synchronized melody targets, score-coded harmony notesequences (or sets) can provide pitch-shifting algorithms withadditional targets (typically coded as offsets relative to a lead melodynote track and typically scored only for selected portions thereof) forpitch-shifting to harmony versions of the user's own captured vocals. Insome cases, pitch correction settings may be characteristic of aparticular artist such as the artist that originally performed (orpopularized) vocals associated with the particular backing track.

In addition, lyrics, melody and harmony track note sets and relatedtiming and control information may be encapsulated as a score coded inan appropriate container or object (e.g., in a Musical InstrumentDigital Interface, MIDI, or Java Script Object Notation, json, typeformat) for supply together with the backing track(s). Using suchinformation, handheld 101, audiovisual display 101A and/or set-top boxequipment, or both, may display lyrics and even visual cues related totarget notes, harmonies and currently detected vocal pitch incorrespondence with an audible performance of the backing track(s) so asto facilitate a karaoke-style vocal performance by a user. Thus, if anaspiring vocalist selects “When I was your Man” as popularized by BrunoMars, your_man.json and your_man.m4a may be downloaded from contentserver 110 (if not already available or cached based on prior download)and, in turn, used to provide background music, synchronized lyrics and,in some situations or embodiments, score-coded note tracks forcontinuous, real-time pitch-correction while the user sings.

Optionally, at least for certain embodiments or genres, harmony notetracks may be score coded for harmony shifts to captured vocals.Typically, a captured pitch-corrected (possibly harmonized) vocalperformance together with performance synchronized video is savedlocally, on the handheld device or set-top box, as one or moreaudiovisual files and is subsequently compressed and encoded for upload(106) to content server 110 as an MPEG-4 container file. MPEG-4 is aninternational standard for the coded representation and transmission ofdigital multimedia content for the Internet, mobile networks andadvanced broadcast applications. Other suitable codecs, compressiontechniques, coding formats and/or containers may be employed if desired.

Depending on the implementation, encodings of dry vocals and/orpitch-corrected vocals may be uploaded (106) to content server 110. Ingeneral, such vocals (encoded, e.g., in an MPEG-4 container orotherwise) whether already pitch-corrected or pitch-corrected at contentserver 110 can then be mixed (111), e.g., with backing audio and othercaptured (and possibly pitch-shifted) vocal performances, to producefiles or streams of quality or coding characteristics selected accordwith capabilities or limitations a particular target or network (e.g.,handheld 120, audiovisual display and/or set-top box equipment, a socialmedia platform, etc.).

As further detailed herein, performances of multiple vocalists(including performance synchronized video) may be accreted and combined,such as to present as a duet-style performance, glee club, window-panedmusic video-style composition or vocal jam session. In some embodiments,a performance synchronized video contribution (for example, in theillustration of FIG. 1, performance synchronized video 122 including aperformance captured at handheld 101 or using audiovisual and/or set-topbox equipment 101A, 101B) may be presented in the resulting mixedaudiovisual performance rendering 123 with video effects applied anddynamically varied throughout the mixed audiovisual performancerendering 123. Video effects applied thereto are based at least in parton application of a video effects (VFX) schedule selected (113) basedeither on user selection or a computationally determined mood. In somecases or embodiments, one or more VFX schedules may be mood-denominatedset of recipes and/or filters that may be applied to present aparticular mood. Segmentation and VFX Engine 112 determines musicalstructure and applies particular visual effects in accordance with theselected video effects. In general, the particular visual effectsapplied are based on segmentation of vocal and/or backing track audio,determined or coded musical structure, a selected or detected mood orstyle and computationally-determined vocal or audio intensity.

VFX schedule selection may be by a user at handheld 101 or usingaudiovisual and/or set-top box equipment 101A, 101B. For example, a usermay select a mood-denominated VFX schedule that includes video effectsselected to provide a palette of “sad” or “somber” video processingeffects. One such palette may provide and apply, in connection withdetermined or coded musical structure, filters providing colors,saturations and contrast that tend to evoke a “sad” or “somber” mood,provide transitions between source videos with little visual energyand/or include particle based effects that present rain, fog, or othereffects consistent with the selected mood. Other palettes may provideand apply, again in connection with determined or coded musicalstructure, filters providing colors, saturations and contrast that tendto evoke an “peppy” or “energetic” mood, provide transitions betweensource videos with significant visual energy or movement, include lensflares or particle based effects augment a visual scene with bubbles,balloons, fireworks or other visual features consistent with theselected mood.

In some embodiments, recipes and/or filters of a given VFX schedule maybe parameterized, e.g., based on computational features, such as averagevocal energy, extracted from audio performances or based on tempo, beat,or audio energy of backing tracks. In some cases, or embodiments, lyricsor musical selection metadata may be employed for VFX scheduleselection. In general, it will be understood in the context of thedescription and claims that follow, that visual effects schedules may,in some cases or embodiments, be iteratively selected and applied to agiven performance or partial performance, e.g., as a user or acontributing vocalist or a post-process video editor seeks to create aparticular mood, be it “sad,” “pensive,” “peppy” or “romantic.”

For simplicity of the initial illustration, FIG. 1 depicts performancesynchronized audio (103) and video (105) capture of a performance 106that is uploaded to content server 110 (or service platform) anddistributed to one or more potential contributing vocalists orperformers, e.g., as a seed performance against which the othercontributing vocalists or performers (#2, #3 . . . #N) captureadditional audiovisual (AV) performances. FIG. 1 depicts the supply ofother captured AV performances #2, #3 . . . #N for audio mix and visualarrangement 111 at content server 110 to produce performancesynchronized video 122. In general, applied visual effects may be variedthroughout the mixed audiovisual performance rendering 123 in accordwith a particular visual effects schedule and segmentation of one ormore of the constituent AV performances. In some cases, segmentation maybe based on signal processing of vocal audio and/or based on precodedmusical structure, including vocal part or section notations, phrase orrepetitive structure of lyrics, etc.

FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C are successive snapshots 191, 192 and 193 of vocalperformance synchronized video along a coordinated audiovisualperformance timeline 151 wherein, in accordance with some embodiments ofthe present invention, video 123 for one, the other or both of twocontributing vocalist has vocal effects applied based on a mood andbased on a computationally-defined audio feature such as vocal intensitycomputed over the captured vocals. Although the images of FIGS. 2A, 2Band 2C do not attempt to faithfully depict particular video effects(which tend to be dynamic and can be visually subtle), persons ofordinary skill having benefit of the present disclosure will understandthat, for a first portion (represented by snapshot 191) of a coordinatedaudiovisual performance, VFX are applied to performance synchronizedvideo for individual performers based on the respective selected ordetected mood for that performer and based vocal intensity of theparticular performance. For a second portion (represented by snapshot192) of the coordinated audiovisual performance, VFX are applied toperformance synchronized video for a single performer based on aselected or detected mood for that performer and a current vocalintensity. Finally, for a third portion (such as a chorus, representedby snapshot 193) of the coordinated audiovisual performance, VFX areapplied to performance synchronized video of both performers based on ajoint or composited mood (whether detected or selected) for theperformers and a current measure of joint vocal intensity.

As will be understood by persons of skill in the art having benefit ofthe present disclosure, performance timeline 151 carries performancesynchronized video across various audio segmentation boundaries, acrosssection and/or group part transitions, and through discrete moments,such that snapshots 191, 192 and 193 will be expected to apply, atdifferent portions of the performance timeline and based on musicalstructure of the audio, different aspects of a particular VFX schedule,e.g., different VFX recipes and VFX filters thereof.

FIGS. 3A, 3B and 3C illustrate an exemplary implementation of asegmentation and video effects (VFX) engine 112 (recall FIG. 1) inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s). Inparticular, FIG. 3A depicts information flows involving an exemplarycoding of musical structure 115 in which audio features of performancesynchronized vocal tracks (e.g., vocal #1 and vocal #2) and a backingtrack are extracted to provide segmentation and annotation for musicalstructure coding 115.

Feature extraction and segmentation 117 provides the annotations andtransition markings of musical structure coding 115 to apply recipes andfilters from a selected visual effects schedule prior to video rendering119. For example, in the exemplary implementation illustrated, featureextraction and segmentation operates on:

-   -   vocals: segmentation “singing” vs. “not singing”, instantaneous        loudness, relative loudness of each segment.    -   backing tracks: tempo, instantaneous loudness, beat detection.    -   midi files: pitch, harmony, lyrics, “part” arrangement markers        (when each vocalist should sing).

In an exemplary implementation, a vocal track is treated as consistingof singing and silence segments. Feature extraction seeks to classifyportions of a solo vocal track into silence and singing segments. Forduet vocal tracks of part 1 and 2, Feature extraction seeks to classifythem into silence, part 1 singing, part 2 singing, and singing togethersegments. Next, segment typing is performed. For example, in someimplementations, a global average vocal intensity and average vocalintensities per segment are computed to determine the “musicalintensity” of each segment with respect to a particular singer'sperformance of a song. Stated differently, segmentation algorithms see,to determine whether a give section is a “louder” section, or a“quieter” section. The start time and end time of every lyric line arealso retrieved from the lyric metadata in some implementations tofacilitate segment typing. Valid segment types and classificationcriteria include:

-   -   Intro: Segment(s) before the start of the first lyric line.    -   Verse: Intensity of the segment is lower than the singer's        average vocal intensity.    -   Bridge: Like verse, but locating in the second half of a song.    -   Pre-chorus: A segment before the chorus segment.    -   Inter: Silent segments but not intro or outro segments    -   Outro: Segment(s) after the end of the last lyric line

Feature extraction and segmentation 117 may also include further audiosignal processing to extract the timing of beats and down beats in thebacking track, and to align the determined segments to down beats. Insome implementations, a Beat Per Minute (BPM) measure is calculated fordetermining the tempo of the song, and moments such as climax, hold andcrescendo identified by using vocal intensities and pitch information.For example, moment types and classification criteria may include:

-   -   Climax: A segment is also marked as a climax segment if it has        the highest vocal intensity.    -   Hold: if a note has a pitch length longer than a predetermined        threshold.    -   Crescendo: a sequence of notes with increasing pitch.

In general, these and other annotations and segmentations may be usedwith styles, recipes and filters to provide performance-driven visualeffects.

FIG. 3B depicts additional detail for an embodiment that decomposes itsvisual effect schedules into a video style-denominated recipes (116B)used for VFX planning and a particular video filters (116A) used in anexemplary VFX rendering pipeline. Video style may be user selected or,in some embodiments, may be selected based on acomputationally-determined mood. In general, for a given video style,multiple recipes are defined and specialized for particular song tempos,recording type (SOLO, duet, or partner artist), etc. A recipe typicallydefines the visual effects such as layouts, transitions,post-processing, color filter, watermarks, and logos for each segmenttype or moment. Based the determined tempo and recording type of a song,an appropriate recipe is selected from the set (116B) thereof.

VFX planner 118 maps the extracted features (segments and moments thatwere annotated or marked in musical structure coding 115, as describedabove) to particular visual effects based on the selected video stylerecipe (116B). VFX planner 118 generates a video rendering jobcontaining a series of visual effect configurations. For each visualeffect configuration, one set of configuration parameters is generated.Parameters such the name of a prebuilt video effect, input video, startand end time, backing track intensities and vocal intensities during theeffect, beats timing information during the effect, specific controlparameters of the video effect and etc. Video effects specified in theconfiguration can be pre-built and coded for directly use by the VFXrenderer 119 to render the coded video effect. Vocal intensities andbacking track intensities are used to drive the visual effects. Beatstiming information is used to align applied video effects with audio.

Finally, FIG. 3C graphically depicts presents an exemplary mapping ofvocal parts and segments to visual layouts, transitions, post-processedvideo effects and particle-based effects, such as may be represented asmusical structure coding 115 (recall FIG. 3A) or, in some embodiments,by video style-denominated recipes (116B) used for VFX planning and aparticular video filters (116A) for VFX rendering. For example,computationally determined segments (intro, verse, inter, pre-chorus,bridge and outro) are mapped to particular visual layouts,post-processed effects and particle-based effects, with coded visualtransitions between segments.

FIG. 4 depicts a variation on previously-described information flows.Specifically, FIG. 4 depicts flows amongst illustrative mobilephone-type portable computing devices in a host and guest configurationin accordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s) in whicha visual effects schedule is applied to a live-stream, duet-type groupaudiovisual performance.

In the illustration of FIG. 4, a current host user of current hostdevice 101B at least partially controls the content of a live stream 122that is buffered for, and streamed to, an audience on devices 120A, 120B. . . 120N. In the illustrated configuration, a current guest user ofcurrent guest device 101A contributes to the group audiovisualperformance mix 111 that is supplied (eventually via content server 110)by current host device 101B as live stream 122. Although devices 120A,120B . . . 120N and, indeed, current guest and host devices 101A, 101Bare, for simplicity, illustrated as handheld devices such as mobilephones, persons of skill in the art having benefit of the presentdisclosure will appreciate that any given member of the audience mayreceive live-stream 122 on any suitable computer, smart television,tablet, via a set-top box or other streaming media capable client.

Content that is mixed to form group audiovisual performance mix 111 iscaptured, in the illustrated configuration, in the context ofkaraoke-style performance capture wherein lyrics 102, optional pitchcues 105 and, typically, a backing track 107 are supplied from contentserver 110 to either or both of current guest device 101A and currenthost device 101B. A current host (on current host device 101B) typicallyexercises ultimate control over the live stream, e.g., by selecting aparticular user (or users) from the audience to act as the currentguest(s), by selecting a particular song from a request queue (and/orvocal parts thereof for particular users), and/or by starting, stoppingor pausing the group AV performance. Once the current host selects orapproves a guest and/or song, the guest user may (in some embodiments)start/stop/pause the roll of backing track 107A for local audiblerendering and otherwise control the content of guest mix 106 (backingtrack roll mixed with captured guest audiovisual content) supplied tocurrent host device 101B. Roll of lyrics 102A and optional pitch cues105A at current guest device 101A is in temporal correspondence with thebacking track 107A, and is likewise subject start/stop/pause control bythe current guest. In some cases or situations, backing audio and/orvideo may be rendered from a media store such as an iTunes™ libraryresident or accessible from a handheld, set-top box, etc.

As will be appreciated by persons of skill in the art having benefit ofthe present disclosure, instances of segmentation and VFX enginefunctionality such as previously described (recall FIG. 1, segmentationand VFX engine 112) may, in the guest-host, live-stream configuration ofFIG. 4, be distributed to host 101B, guest 101A and/or content server110. Descriptions of segmentation and VFX engine 112 relative to FIGS.3A, 3B and 3C will thus be understood to analogously describeimplementations of similar functionality 112A, 112B and/or 112C relativeto devices or components of FIG. 4.

Typically, in embodiments in accordance with the guest-host, live-streamconfiguration of FIG. 4, song requests 132 are audience-sourced andconveyed by signaling paths to content selection and guest queue controllogic 112 of content server 110. Host controls 131 and guest controls133 are illustrated as bi-directional signaling paths. Other queuing andcontrol logic configurations consistent with the operations described,including host or guest controlled queuing and/or song selection, willbe appreciated based on the present disclosure.

Notwithstanding a non-negligible temporal lag (typically 100-250 ms, butpossibly more), current host device 101B receives and audibly rendersguest mix 106 as a backing track against which the current host'saudiovisual performance are captured at current host device 101B. Rollof lyrics 102B and optional pitch cues 105B at current host device 101Bis in temporal correspondence with the backing track, here guest mix106. To facilitate synchronization to the guest mix 106 in view oftemporal lag in the peer-to-peer communications channel between currentguest device 101A and current host device 101B as well as for guest-sidestart/stop/pause control, marker beacons may be encoded in the guest mixto provide the appropriate phase control of lyrics 102B and optionalpitch cues 105B on screen. Alternatively, phase analysis of any backingtrack 107A included in guest mix 106 (or any bleed through, if thebacking track is separately encoded or conveyed) may be used to providethe appropriate phase control of lyrics 102B and optional pitch cues105B on screen at current host device 101B.

It will be understood that temporal lag in the peer-to-peercommunications channel between current guest device 101A and currenthost device 101B affects both guest mix 106 and communications in theopposing direction (e.g., host mic 103C signal encodings). Any of avariety of communications channels may be used to convey audiovisualsignals and controls between current guest device 101A and current hostdevice 101B, as well as between the guest and host devices 101A, 101Band content server 110 and between audience devices 120A, 120B . . .120N and content server 110. For example, respective telecommunicationscarrier wireless facilities and/or wireless local area networks andrespective wide-area network gateways (not specifically shown) mayprovide communications to and from devices 101A, 101B, 120A, 120B . . .120N. Based on the description herein, persons of skill in the art willrecognize that any of a variety of data communications facilities,including 802.11 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth™ , 4G-LTE wireless, wired datanetworks, wired or wireless audiovisual interconnects such as in accordwith HDMI, AVI, Wi-Di standards or facilities may employed, individuallyor in combination to facilitate communications and/or audiovisualrendering described herein.

User vocals 103A and 103B are captured at respective handhelds 101A,101B, and may be optionally pitch-corrected continuously and inreal-time and audibly rendered mixed with the locally-appropriatebacking track (e.g., backing track 107A at current guest device 101A andguest mix 106 at current host device 101B) to provide the user with animproved tonal quality rendition of his/her own vocal performance. Pitchcorrection is typically based on score-coded note sets or cues (e.g.,the pitch and harmony cues 105A, 105B visually displayed at currentguest device 101A and at current host device 101B, respectively), whichprovide continuous pitch-correction algorithms executing on therespective device with performance-synchronized sequences of targetnotes in a current key or scale. In addition to performance-synchronizedmelody targets, score-coded harmony note sequences (or sets) providepitch-shifting algorithms with additional targets (typically coded asoffsets relative to a lead melody note track and typically scored onlyfor selected portions thereof) for pitch-shifting to harmony versions ofthe user's own captured vocals. In some cases, pitch correction settingsmay be characteristic of a particular artist such as the artist thatperformed vocals associated with the particular backing track.

In general, lyrics, melody and harmony track note sets and relatedtiming and control information may be encapsulated in an appropriatecontainer or object (e.g., in a Musical Instrument Digital Interface,MIDI, or Java Script Object Notation, json, type format) for supplytogether with the backing track(s). Using such information, devices 101Aand 101B (as well as associated audiovisual displays and/or set-top boxequipment, not specifically shown) may display lyrics and even visualcues related to target notes, harmonies and currently detected vocalpitch in correspondence with an audible performance of the backingtrack(s) so as to facilitate a karaoke-style vocal performance by auser. Thus, if an aspiring vocalist selects “When I Was Your Man” aspopularized by Bruno Mars, your_man.json and your_man_.m4a may bedownloaded from the content server (if not already available or cachedbased on prior download) and, in turn, used to provide background music,synchronized lyrics and, in some situations or embodiments, score-codednote tracks for continuous, real-time pitch-correction while the usersings. Optionally, at least for certain embodiments or genres, harmonynote tracks may be score coded for harmony shifts to captured vocals.Typically, a captured pitch-corrected (possibly harmonized) vocalperformance together with performance synchronized video is savedlocally, on the handheld device or set-top box, as one or moreaudiovisual files and is subsequently compressed and encoded forcommunication (e.g., as guest mix 106 or group audiovisual performancemix 111 or constituent encodings thereof) to content server 110 as anMPEG-4 container file. MPEG-4 is one suitable standard for the codedrepresentation and transmission of digital multimedia content for theInternet, mobile networks and advanced broadcast applications. Othersuitable codecs, compression techniques, coding formats and/orcontainers may be employed if desired.

As will be appreciated by persons of skill in the art having benefit ofthe present disclosure, performances of multiple vocalists (includingperformance synchronized video) may be accreted and combined, such as toform a duet-style performance, glee club, or vocal jam session. In someembodiments of the present invention, social network constructs may atleast partially supplant or inform host control of the pairings ofgeographically-distributed vocalists and/or formation ofgeographically-distributed virtual glee clubs. For example, relative toFIG. 4, individual vocalists may perform as current host and guest usersin a manner captured (with vocal audio and performance synchronizedvideo) and eventually streamed as a live stream 122 to an audience. Suchcaptured audiovisual content may, in turn, be distributed to socialmedia contacts of the vocalist, members of the audience etc., via anopen call mediated by the content server. In this way, the vocaliststhemselves, members of the audience (and/or the content server orservice platform on their behalf) may invite others to join in acoordinated audiovisual performance, or as members of an audience orguest queue.

FIG. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating information transfers thatcontribute to or involve a composited audiovisual performance 211segmented to provide musical structure for video effects mapping inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s). Videoeffects schedule 210 specifies for respective segmented elements of themusical structure, particular visual layouts and mood-denominated visualeffects such a particle based effects, transitions between videosources, animations of frame motion, vector graphics/images ofpatterns/textures and/or color/saturation/contrast. In general,intensity of applied video effects is determined based on an intensitymeasure from the captured audiovisual performance (typically vocalintensity), although energy density of one or more audio tracks,including a backing track, may be included in some cases or embodiments.

In the illustrated configuration of signal processing pipelines that maybe implemented at a user device such as handheld 101, 101A or 1018, auser/vocalist sings along with a backing track karaoke style. Vocalscaptured from a microphone input 201 are continuously pitch-corrected(252) and harmonized (255) in real-time for mix (253) with the backingtrack which is audibly rendered at one or more acoustic transducers 202.

Both pitch correction and added harmonies are chosen to correspond topitch tracks 207 of a musical score, which in the illustratedconfiguration, is wirelessly communicated (261) to the device(s) (e.g.,from content server 110 to handheld 101 or set-top box equipment, recallFIG. 1) on which vocal capture and pitch-correction is to be performed,together with lyrics 208 and an audio encoding of the backing track 209.

In the computational flow of FIG. 5, pitch corrected or shifted vocalsmay be combined (254) or aggregated for mix (253) with anaudibly-rendered backing track and/or communicated (262) to contentserver 110 or a remote device (e.g., handheld 120 or 520, televisionand/or set-top box equipment, or some other media-capable, computationalsystem 511). In some embodiments, pitch correction or shifting of vocalsand/or segmentation of audiovisual performances may be performed atcontent server 110.

As before, persons of skill in the art having benefit of the presentdisclosure, will appreciate that instances of segmentation and VFXengine functionality such as previously described (recall FIG. 1,segmentation and VFX engine 112) may, in other embodiments, be deployedat a handheld 101, audiovisual and/or set-top box equipment, or otheruser device. Accordingly, descriptions of segmentation and VFX engine112 relative to FIGS. 3A, 3B and 3C will be understood to analogouslydescribe implementations of similar functionality 112D relative tosignal processing pipelines of FIG. 5.

FIG. 6 is a functional block diagram of hardware and software componentsexecutable at an illustrative mobile phone-type portable computingdevice to facilitate processing of a captured audiovisual performance inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s). In someembodiments (recall FIG. 1), capture of vocal audio and performancesynchronized video may be performed using facilities of television-typedisplay and/or set-top box equipment. However, in other embodiments, ahandheld device (e.g., handheld device 101) may itself support captureof both vocal audio and performance synchronized video.

Thus, FIG. 6 illustrates basic signal processing flows in accord withcertain implementations suitable for mobile phone-type handheld device101 to capture vocal audio and performance synchronized video, togenerate pitch-corrected and optionally harmonized vocals for audiblerendering (locally and/or at a remote target device), and to communicatewith a content server or service platform 110 that includes segmentationand visual effects engine 112, whereby captured audiovisual performancesare segmented to reveal musical structure and, based on the revealedmusical structure, particular visual effects are applied from a videoeffects schedule. As before, vocal intensity is measured and utilized(in some embodiments) to vary or modulate intensity of mood-denominatedvisual effects.

Exemplary Visual Effects for Cohesion of Multiperformer Visuals

FIG. 7 illustrates process steps and results of processing, inaccordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s), to applycolor correction and mood-denominated video effects (see 701B, 702B) tovideo for respective performers (701A and 702A) of a group performanceseparately captured using cameras of respective capture devices. FIGS.8A and 8B illustrate visuals for a group performance with (802) andwithout (801) use of a visual blur technique applied in accordance withsome embodiments of the present invention(s).

An Exemplary Mobile Device and Network

FIG. 9 illustrates features of a mobile device that may serve as aplatform for execution of software implementations, includingaudiovisual capture, in accordance with some embodiments of the presentinvention(s). In particular, FIG. 9 illustrates features of a mobiledevice that may serve as a platform for execution of softwareimplementations in accordance with some embodiments of the presentinvention. More specifically, FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a mobiledevice 900 that is generally consistent with commercially-availableversions of an iPhone™ mobile digital device. Although embodiments ofthe present invention are certainly not limited to iPhone deployments orapplications (or even to iPhone-type devices), the iPhone deviceplatform, together with its rich complement of sensors, multimediafacilities, application programmer interfaces and wireless applicationdelivery model, provides a highly capable platform on which to deploycertain implementations. Based on the description herein, persons ofordinary skill in the art will appreciate a wide range of additionalmobile device platforms that may be suitable (now or hereafter) for agiven implementation or deployment of the inventive techniques describedherein.

Summarizing briefly, mobile device 900 includes a display 902 that canbe sensitive to haptic and/or tactile contact with a user.Touch-sensitive display 902 can support multi-touch features, processingmultiple simultaneous touch points, including processing data related tothe pressure, degree and/or position of each touch point. Suchprocessing facilitates gestures and interactions with multiple fingersand other interactions. Of course, other touch-sensitive displaytechnologies can also be used, e.g., a display in which contact is madeusing a stylus or other pointing device.

Typically, mobile device 900 presents a graphical user interface on thetouch-sensitive display 902, providing the user access to various systemobjects and for conveying information. In some implementations, thegraphical user interface can include one or more display objects 904,906. In the example shown, the display objects 904, 906, are graphicrepresentations of system objects. Examples of system objects includedevice functions, applications, windows, files, alerts, events, or otheridentifiable system objects. In some embodiments of the presentinvention, applications, when executed, provide at least some of thedigital acoustic functionality described herein.

Typically, the mobile device 900 supports network connectivityincluding, for example, both mobile radio and wireless internetworkingfunctionality to enable the user to travel with the mobile device 900and its associated network-enabled functions. In some cases, the mobiledevice 900 can interact with other devices in the vicinity (e.g., viaWi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc.). For example, mobile device 900 can beconfigured to interact with peers or a base station for one or moredevices. As such, mobile device 900 may grant or deny network access toother wireless devices.

Mobile device 900 includes a variety of input/output (I/O) devices,sensors and transducers. For example, a speaker 960 and a microphone 962are typically included to facilitate audio, such as the capture of vocalperformances and audible rendering of backing tracks and mixedpitch-corrected vocal performances as described elsewhere herein. Insome embodiments of the present invention, speaker 960 and microphone962 may provide appropriate transducers for techniques described herein.An external speaker port 964 can be included to facilitate hands-freevoice functionalities, such as speaker phone functions. An audio jack966 can also be included for use of headphones and/or a microphone. Insome embodiments, an external speaker and/or microphone may be used as atransducer for the techniques described herein.

Other sensors can also be used or provided. A proximity sensor 968 canbe included to facilitate the detection of user positioning of mobiledevice 900. In some implementations, an ambient light sensor 970 can beutilized to facilitate adjusting brightness of the touch-sensitivedisplay 902. An accelerometer 972 can be utilized to detect movement ofmobile device 900, as indicated by the directional arrow 974.Accordingly, display objects and/or media can be presented according toa detected orientation, e.g., portrait or landscape. In someimplementations, mobile device 900 may include circuitry and sensors forsupporting a location determining capability, such as that provided bythe global positioning system (GPS) or other positioning systems (e.g.,systems using Wi-Fi access points, television signals, cellular grids,Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)) to facilitate geocodings describedherein. Mobile device 900 also includes a camera lens and imaging sensor980. In some implementations, instances of a camera lens and sensor 980are located on front and back surfaces of the mobile device 900. Thecameras allow capture still images and/or video for association withcaptured pitch-corrected vocals.

Mobile device 900 can also include one or more wireless communicationsubsystems, such as an 802.11b/g/n/ac communication device, and/or aBluetooth™ communication device 988. Other communication protocols canalso be supported, including other 802.x communication protocols (e.g.,WiMax, Wi-Fi, 3G), fourth generation protocols and modulations (4G-LTE)and beyond (e.g., 5G), code division multiple access (CDMA), globalsystem for mobile communications (GSM), Enhanced Data GSM Environment(EDGE), etc. A port device 990, e.g., a Universal Serial Bus (USB) port,or a docking port, or some other wired port connection, can be includedand used to establish a wired connection to other computing devices,such as other communication devices 900, network access devices, apersonal computer, a printer, or other processing devices capable ofreceiving and/or transmitting data. Port device 990 may also allowmobile device 900 to synchronize with a host device using one or moreprotocols, such as, for example, the TCP/IP, HTTP, UDP and any otherknown protocol.

FIG. 10 is a network diagram that illustrates cooperation of exemplarydevices in accordance with some embodiments of the present invention(s).In particular, FIG. 10 illustrates respective instances of handhelddevices or portable computing devices such as mobile device 1001employed in audiovisual capture and programmed with vocal audio andvideo capture code, user interface code, pitch correction code, an audiorendering pipeline and playback code in accord with the functionaldescriptions herein. A first device instance is depicted as, forexample, employed in a vocal audio and performance synchronized videocapture, while device instance 1020A operates in a presentation orplayback mode for a mixed audiovisual performance with dynamic visualprominence for performance synchronized video. An additionaltelevision-type display and/or set-top box equipment 1020B is likewisedepicted operating in a presentation or playback mode, although asdescribed elsewhere herein, such equipment may also operate as part of avocal audio and performance synchronized video capture facility. Each ofthe aforementioned devices communicate via wireless data transportand/or intervening networks 1004 with a server 1012 or service platformthat hosts storage and/or functionality explained herein with regard tocontent server 110 (recall FIGS. 1, 4, 5 and 6). Captured,pitch-corrected vocal performances with performance synchronized videomixed to present mixed AV performance rendering with applied visualeffects as described herein may (optionally) be streamed andaudiovisually rendered at laptop computer 1011.

Other Embodiments

While the invention(s) is (are) described with reference to variousembodiments, it will be understood that these embodiments areillustrative and that the scope of the invention(s) is not limited tothem. Many variations, modifications, additions, and improvements arepossible. For example, while particular video effects, transitions andaudiovisual mixing techniques are illustrated and described, persons ofskill in the art having benefit of the present disclosure willappreciate number variations and adaptions suitable for a givendeployment, implementation, musical genre or user demographic. Likewise,while pitch correction vocal performances captured in accord with akaraoke-style interface have been described, other variations andadaptations will be appreciated. Furthermore, while certain illustrativesignal processing techniques have been described in the context ofcertain illustrative applications and device/system configurations,persons of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that it isstraightforward to modify the described techniques to accommodate othersuitable signal processing techniques and effects.

Embodiments in accordance with the present invention may take the formof, and/or be provided as, a computer program product encoded in amachine-readable medium as instruction sequences and other functionalconstructs of software, which may in turn be executed in a computationalsystem (such as a iPhone handheld, mobile or portable computing device,or content server platform) to perform methods described herein. Ingeneral, a machine readable medium can include tangible articles thatencode information in a form (e.g., as applications, source or objectcode, functionally descriptive information, etc.) readable by a machine(e.g., a computer, computational facilities of a mobile device orportable computing device, etc.) as well as tangible storage incident totransmission of the information. A machine-readable medium may include,but is not limited to, magnetic storage medium (e.g., disks and/or tapestorage); optical storage medium (e.g., CD-ROM, DVD, etc.);magneto-optical storage medium; read only memory (ROM); random accessmemory (RAM); erasable programmable memory (e.g., EPROM and EEPROM);flash memory; or other types of medium suitable for storing electronicinstructions, operation sequences, functionally descriptive informationencodings, etc.

In general, plural instances may be provided for components, operationsor structures described herein as a single instance. Boundaries betweenvarious components, operations and data stores are somewhat arbitrary,and particular operations are illustrated in the context of specificillustrative configurations. Other allocations of functionality areenvisioned and may fall within the scope of the invention(s). Ingeneral, structures and functionality presented as separate componentsin the exemplary configurations may be implemented as a combinedstructure or component. Similarly, structures and functionalitypresented as a single component may be implemented as separatecomponents. These and other variations, modifications, additions, andimprovements may fall within the scope of the invention(s).

What is claimed is:
 1. A method comprising: accessing a machine readableencoding of a first audiovisual performance captured as vocal audio withperformance synchronized video and having an associated musicalstructure encoding that includes at least musical section boundariescoded for temporal alignment with the first audiovisual performanceencoding; applying a first visual effect schedule to at least a portionof the first audiovisual performance encoding, wherein the appliedvisual effect schedule encodes differing visual effects for differingmusical structure elements of the first audiovisual performance encodingand provides visual effect transitions in temporal alignment with atleast some of the coded musical section boundaries.
 2. The method ofclaim 1, further comprising: segmenting at least an audio track of thefirst audiovisual performance encoding to provide the associated musicalstructure encoding.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the associatedmusical structure encoding includes group part or musical sectionmetadata.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the differing visual effectsdiffer in either degree or type or both degree and type.
 5. The methodof claim 1, further comprising: selecting the first visual effectschedule from amongst a plurality of visual effect schedules.
 6. Themethod of claim 5, wherein the selecting is based on acomputationally-determined mood for at least the captured vocal audio.7. The method of claim 5, wherein the selecting is based on a userinterface selection by the vocal audio performer prior to, or coincidentwith, capture of the vocal audio.
 8. The method of claim 5, furthercomprising: selecting a second visual effect schedule from amongst theplurality of mood-denominated visual effect schedules, the second visualeffect schedule differing from the first visual effect schedule; andapplying the second visual effect schedule to at least a portion of thefirst audiovisual performance encoding.
 9. The method of claim 5,further comprising: streaming, to an audience at one or more remoteclient devices, the first audiovisual performance.
 10. The method ofclaim 9, wherein the streamed first audiovisual performance is mixedwith an encoding of a backing track against which the vocal audio wascaptured.
 11. The method of claim 9, wherein the streamed firstaudiovisual performance is streamed with the first visual effectschedule applied.
 12. The method of claim 8, further comprising:supplying an identification of the applied visual effect schedule forvideo effect rendering at one or more of the remote client devices. 13.The method of claim 5, further comprising: to, from, or via a contentserver or service platform, transferring the first audiovisualperformance together with at least an identifier for the one or moreapplied visual effect schedules.
 14. The method of claim 5, wherein theselecting is based on a user interface selection during, or prior to,audiovisual rendering of the first audiovisual performance.
 15. Themethod of claim 14, further comprising: after the audiovisual renderingof the first audiovisual performance, selecting a second visual effectschedule from amongst the plurality of mood-denominated visual effectschedules, the second visual effect schedule differing from the firstvisual effect schedule; and applying the second visual effect scheduleto at least a portion of the first audiovisual performance encoding. 16.The method of claim 5, wherein for a particular mood-denominated visualeffect schedule, mood values are parameterized as a two-dimensionalquantity, wherein a first dimension of the mood parameterization codesan emotion and wherein second dimension of the mood parameterizationcodes intensity.
 17. The method of claim 16, further comprising:determining an intensity dimension of the mood parameterization based onone or more of: (i) a time-varying audio signal strength or vocal energydensity measure computationally determined from the vocal audio and (ii)beats, tempo, signal strength or energy density of a backing audiotrack.
 18. The method of claim 1, further comprising: segmenting thefirst audiovisual performance encoding to identify the differing musicalstructure elements.
 19. The method of claim 18, wherein the segmentingis based at least in part on a computational determination of vocalintensity with at least some segmentation boundaries constrained totemporally align with beats or tempo computationally extracted from acorresponding audio backing track.
 20. The method of claim 18, whereinthe segmenting is based at least in part on a similarity analysiscomputationally performed on a temporally-aligned lyrics track toclassify particular portions of first audiovisual performance encodingas verse or chorus.
 21. The method of claim 1, further comprising:segmenting an audio backing track associated with the first audiovisualperformance encoding to identify the differing musical structureelements.
 22. The method of claim 1, wherein the differing visualeffects encoded by the applied visual effect schedule include for agiven element thereof, one or more of: a particle-based effect or lensflare; transitions between, or layouts of, distinct source videos;animations or motion of a frame within a source video vector graphics orimages of patterns or textures; and color, saturation or contrast. 23.The method of claim 1, wherein the differing visual effects encoded bythe applied visual effect schedule include for a given element thereof,one or more of: visual augmentation or ornamentation of a video image ofa vocal performer's face, head or body; and background subtraction. 24.The method of claim 1, wherein the associated musical structure encodesmusical sections of differing types; and wherein the applied visualeffect schedule defines differing visual effects for different ones ofthe encoded musical sections.
 25. The method of claim 1, wherein theassociated musical structure encodes events or transitions; and whereinthe applied visual effect schedule defines differing visual effects fordifferent ones of the encoded events or transitions.
 26. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the machine readable encoding further encodes at leastpart of a second audiovisual performance captured as second vocal audiowith performance synchronized video, the first and second audiovisualperformances constituting a group performance.
 27. The method of claim26, wherein the associated musical structure encodes group parts, andwherein the applied visual effect schedule is temporally selective forparticular performance synchronized video in correspondence with theencoded musical structure.
 28. The method of claim 26, wherein the firstand second audiovisual performances present as a duet.
 29. The method ofclaim 26, wherein the applied visual effect schedule codes, for at leastsome musical structure elements, color matching of performancesynchronized video for respective performers in the group performance.30. The method of claim 26, wherein the applied visual effect schedulecodes, for at least some musical structure elements, a visual blur orblend at an interface between performance synchronized video forrespective performers in the group performance.
 31. The method of claim26, wherein the first and second audiovisual performances are capturedagainst a common backing track.
 32. The method of claim 1, furthercomprising: capturing the first audiovisual performance at anetwork-connected vocal capture device communicatively coupled to acontent server or service platform from which the musical structureencoding is supplied.
 33. The method of claim 32, wherein theaudiovisual performance capture is performed at the network-connectedvocal capture device in accordance with a Karaoke-style operationalmechanic in which lyrics are visually presented in correspondence withaudible rendering of a backing track.
 34. The method of claim 1,performed, at least in part, on a content server or service platform towhich geographically-distributed, network-connected, vocal capturedevices are communicatively coupled.
 35. The method of claim 1,performed, at least in part, on a network-connected, vocal capturedevice communicatively coupled to a content server or service platform.36. The method of claim 1, embodied, at least in part, as a computerprogram product encoding of instructions executable on a content serveror service platform to which a plurality of geographically-distributed,network-connected, vocal capture devices are communicatively coupled.37. A system comprising: a geographically distributed set ofnetwork-connected devices configured to capture audiovisual performancesincluding vocal audio with performance synchronized video; and a serviceplatform configured to (i) receive encodings of the captured audiovisualperformances and, in correspondence with associated musical structureencodings that include at least musical section boundaries coded fortemporal alignment with the audiovisual performance encodings, to (ii)apply particular visual effect schedules to at least a portion of theaudiovisual performance encodings, wherein the applied visual effectschedules encode differing visual effects for differing musicalstructure elements of the audiovisual performance encodings and providevisual effect transitions in temporal alignment with at least some ofthe coded musical section boundaries.
 38. The system of claim 37,wherein the service platform is configured to, responsive to user orperformer selections, change the applied visual effect schedules andsupply resulting captured audiovisual performances to respective ones ofthe geographically distributed network-connected devices for audiovisualrendering thereon.
 39. The system of claim 38, wherein the appliedvisual effect schedules are selected from amongst a plurality of visualeffect schedules.
 40. A system comprising: at least a guest and hostpairing of network-connected devices configured to capture at leastvocal audio; and the host device configured to (i) receive from theguest device an encoding of a respective encoding of at least vocalaudio and, in correspondence with an associated musical structureencoding that includes at least musical section boundaries coded fortemporal alignment with an audiovisual performance encoding, to (ii)apply a selected visual effect schedules to the audiovisual performanceencoding, wherein the applied visual effect schedules encode differingvisual effects for differing musical structure elements of theaudiovisual performance encoding and provide visual effect transitionsin temporal alignment with at least some of the coded musical sectionboundaries.
 41. The system of claim 40, the host and guest devicescoupled as local and remote peers via communication network withnon-negligible peer-to-peer latency for transmissions of audiovisualcontent, the host device communicatively coupled as the local peer toreceive a media encoding of a mixed audio performance constituting vocalaudio captured at the guest device, and the guest device communicativelycoupled as the remote peer to supply the media encoding captured from afirst one of the performers and mixed with a backing audio track. 42.The system of claim 40, wherein associated musical structure encoding iscomputationally determined at the host device based on segmenting atleast an audio track received from the guest device.
 43. The system ofclaim 40, the host device configured to render the audiovisualperformance coding as a mixed audiovisual performance, including vocalaudio and performance synchronized video from the first and a second oneof the performers, and transmit the audiovisual performance coding as anapparently live broadcast with the selected visual effect scheduleapplied.